There are quite a lot of splendid Ss, so here we go…
MALCOLM
SAVILLE was one of my favourite authors when I was growing up, though his books
are no longer as popular as they were. He
described the Shropshire countryside so well that I felt a strong pull towards
the place, and even the names of the Long Mynd, the Stiperstones and Church
Stretton still give me a shiver of excitement all these years later. First introduced to me at the age of 11 by my
form teacher, the books about the four, six or sometimes eight children who made
up the Lone Pine Club inspired me to form an offshoot Lone Pine Club with my
friend, though unsurprisingly we never had the sort of adventures Saville’s
characters did. He wrote his first book,
Mystery at Witchend, in 1943 when his
children had been evacuated to Shropshire from their home in Hertfordshire. It
was followed by a further 19 books in the Lone Pine series, as well as several
other series of books for children, and many of his 90 books were broadcast by
the BBC. He died in 1982.
LOUIS
SACHAR is an American young-adult mystery-comedy author, best known for the award-winning
Holes, which won the 1998 US National
Book Award for Young People’s Literature and the 1999 Newbery Medal for the year’s “most distinguished
contribution to American literature for children. In 2003 Disney turned the book into a film,
with Sachar himself writing the screenplay.
He lives in Texas.
CATHERINE
STORR was an English children's writer born in 1913, best known for a series of
books about a wolf ineffectually pursuing a young girl who outwits him every
time, beginning with Clever Polly and the Stupid Wolf (1955), which she wrote for her
daughter Polly. In 1958 she wrote a
novel for slightly older children called Marianne
Dreams. This book was made into the
TV series Escape Into Night and the
film Paperhouse, though she was not
fond of the latter, especially the ending.
Her books often involve confronting fears, even in the lighthearted
Polly stories, and she was aware that she wrote frightening stories, but felt
that reading about evil gave children some power over it. She worked as a doctor for some years while regularly
producing new children’s books, and she continued writing until she died in
London in 2001, aged 89.
ROBERT
LOUIS STEVENSON, born in Edinburgh in 1850, was a Scottish writer, poet and
musician, whose most famous works are Treasure Island, Kidnapped, The Strange Case
of Dr. Jekyll and Mr Hyde and
A Child’s Garden of Verses. He
grew up in Scotland but he suffered from poor health all his life, exacerbated
by cold and damp, so after frequent trips to Europe and America, on his doctor’s
advice he spent most of his adult life living in warmer climes. He died in Samoa in 1894 at the age of 44.
MAURICE
SENDAK was an American illustrator and writer of children’s books. Born in Brooklyn, New York, in 1928, to
Jewish-Polish parents, his childhood was affected by the death of many of his
family members during the Holocaust.
He became widely known for his book Where the Wild Things Are, first published in 1963.
He also wrote works such as In the
Night Kitchen, Outside Over There, and illustrated many works by other
authors including the Little Bear books
by Else Holmelund Minarik. In 1970
he received the third biennial Hans Christian Andersen Award for
Illustration, recognizing his "lasting contribution to children's
literature". He died in 2012.
ROSEMARY
SUTCLIFF was an English novelist best known for her children’s books,
especially historical fiction and retellings of myths and legends. When very young she was stricken with Still’s
Disease, and spent most of her life in a wheelchair, but wrote incessantly
throughout her life. Inspired by the
children’s historical novels of Geoffrey Trease, her first published book was The Chronicles of Robin Hood in
1950. In 1954, she published what remains her best-known work The Eagle of the Ninth, part of a series of 8
books on Roman Britain and its aftermath, and this was followed by many other
novels for children and adults. For her
contribution as a children's writer Sutcliff was a runner-up for the Hans
Christian Andersen Medal in 1974, and the third book in her Eagle series, The Lantern Bearers, won the Carnegie medal in 1959. She was also awarded the OBE in 1975 and the
CBE in 1992, shortly before her death in Sussex.
JEREMY
STRONG was born in London in 1949 and following a spell as a teacher and head
teacher, now writes humorous books for children, mainly of junior school age. These include My Mum's Going to
Explode (2001) and There's a Viking in my Bed (1991),
which was dramatised for Children's BBC Television. In 2001 the
Federation of Children’s Book Groups named his I’m Telling you, They’re Aliens one of the 50 best children’s books
of the year, and in 2003 Krazy Kow Saves the World - Well, Almost (2002) won
the same honour. Several of his stories
have been adapted for BBC Radio. He now lives
in Somerset and is currently leading a 'Campaign for Fun', to encourage reading
for pleasure.
JOHANNA
SPYRI was born in Switzerland in 1857.
She wrote many novels, especially for children, but is best-known for
her book Heidi. Heidi is
the story of an orphan girl who lives with her grandfather in the
Swiss Alps, and is famous for its vivid portrayal of the landscape. She died in 1901.
NOEL
STREATFEILD was another of my favourite authors when I was growing up. I listened avidly to her books broadcast on
Children’s Hour on the BBC, and borrowed those and others from the
library. She was born in 1895, the second
of five surviving children of a vicarage family (hence her close experience of
and sympathy for children born into large impoverished families) and worked for
ten years as an actress. She later used
her familiarity with the stage as the basis for many of her popular books for
children, which were often about children struggling with careers in the
arts. She is best known for her children’s
books including the “Shoes” books, such as Ballet
Shoes, (1936) her first book, which was commended for the Carnegie medal
and launched a successful career in writing. This was swiftly followed by Tennis Shoes and Circus Shoes, which won the Carnegie medal in 1938, and others including Party Shoes and my own favourite White Boots (originally entitled Skating Shoes.) Several of her books have
been adapted for television, and in 2007 Granada television adapted Ballet Shoes as a full-length feature
film starring Victoria Wood and Emma Watson. She won the OBE in 1983 and died in 1986.
ANNA
SEWELL, born in Great Yarmouth in 1820, is also famous for one particular
book. In 1877, when she was 57, her only
novel Black Beauty was
published, and is now recognised as one of the top ten best selling novels for
children ever created. At the age of 14
she injured both her ankles, and from then on used horse-drawn carriages to get
about. This contributed to her love
of horses and concern for the humane treatment of animals. Although the book is now considered a
children's classic, Sewell originally wrote it for those who worked with horses,
hoping to induce an understanding treatment of them and reduce cruelty to
them, and the book, written from the point of view of the horse himself, could
be said to have achieved this aim. She became very ill shortly after the book’s
publication, and died soon afterwards in 1878.
DR. SEUSS
is the pen-name of Theodor Seuss
"Ted" Geisel, and American children’s author, political cartoonist,
poet, animator, screenwriter, filmmaker and artist. Born in 1904, he is best known
for his work writing and illustrating more than 60 books under the
pen name Dr Seuss, and his work includes many of the most popular
children's books of all time, selling over 600 million copies and being
translated into more than 20 languages by the time of his death. He published his first book, And to Think that I saw it on Mulberry
Street, in 1937. During WWII he took
a brief break from writing to draw political cartoons, but after the war he
returned to children’s books. In May
1954, Life magazine
published a report on illiteracy among school children which
concluded that children were not learning to read because their books were
boring. William Ellsworth Spaulding, the director of the education division at
Houghton Mifflin, compiled a list of 348 words that he felt were important for
first-graders to recognize. He asked Geisel to cut the list to 250 words and to
write a book using only those words. Spaulding challenged Geisel to
"bring back a book children can't put down". Nine
months later, Geisel completed The Cat in
the Hat, using 236 of the words given to him. It retained the drawing
style, verse rhythms, and all the imaginative power of his earlier works
but, because of its simplified vocabulary, it could be read by beginning
readers. The Cat in the Hat and subsequent books written for
young children achieved significant international success and they remain very
popular today. In 2009, Green Eggs and Ham sold 540,366
copies, The Cat in the Hat sold 452,258 copies, and One Fish, Two Fish, Red Fish, Blue Fish (1960)
sold 409,068 copies—outselling the majority of newly published children's
books. In 1984 he won a special
Pulitzer Prize for his "contribution over nearly half a century to the
education and enjoyment of America's children and their parents". He died in 1991.
website: www.lynnebenton.com
Latest book: Danger at Hadrian's Wall
7 comments:
The post was an education in itself. Thank you.
S is obviously a much loved letter within children's books.
So many favourites here! It's interesting - I recently did a retelling of Black Beauty. I'd read it and loved it as a child, but it was only when I reread it for the purposes of retelling that I realised it's a kind of manual for how to treat horses properly - that's its underlying structure, rather than simply the tale of Black Beauty and Ginger, which is what gives the story its emotional heft.
I remember getting Malcolm Saville books from the library - they were in the boys' section, where all the good stuff was! - and enjoying them, but I don't remember anything about them. I still re-read Heidi now.
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I think you'll find that 'White Boots' was Streatfeild's original title, and the insistence on putting 'Shoes' on the end of a number of her titles was from the publishers of the US reprints. 'Theatre Shoes', for instance was originally 'Curtain Up'.
Thank you for your comments, folks! And Abbey, I stand corrected: "White Boots" was her original title. Since so many of her titles were changed to fit with "the brand" at Random House US, it can get a bit confusing! (Especially since I read so many of them with their original titles!)
This is a great reminder of so many favourite books, both from my own childhood and from my children's childhood. I had exactly that edition of Heidi! And I recently re-read Kidnapped, which was my favourite of R L Stevenson's books, and still love it. I too remember the Streatfeild titles such as 'Curtain Up'. How boring and annoying to have 'Shoes' on all of them! Far less memorable.
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